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Presbyopia compensation: looking for cortical predictors
  1. Léa Imbeau1,
  2. Sadi Majzoub1,
  3. Alix Thillay2,
  4. Frederique Bonnet-Brilhault2,
  5. Pierre-Jean Pisella1,
  6. Magali Batty2
  1. 1Service d'Ophtalmologie, Université François-Rabelais de Tours, CHRU de Tours, Tours, France
  2. 2Université François-Rabelais de Tours, INSERM, Imagerie et Cerveau UMR U 930, CHRU de Tours, Centre Universitaire de PédoPsychiatrie, Tours, France
  1. Correspondence to Dr Magali Batty, Centre Universitaire de Pedopsychiatrie, CHRU de Tours, 2 Bld Tonnellé, Tours 37000, France; magali.batty{at}univ-tours.fr

Abstract

Background/aims New surgical techniques have recently been developed in order to compensate for visual impairment and to improve visual comfort for patients with presbyopia. However, the results are still variable, depending on the correction modality used and/or the patient. The main purpose of this study was to identify predictive electrophysiological markers of postcorrection visual comfort for patients with presbyopia.

Methods Thirteen patients with presbyopia (aged between 45 and 60 years) received successive randomised presbyopia compensation with contact lenses supplying monovision (one eye corrected for distance, the other for near vision) and simultaneous vision (progressive lenses). The period for each type of correction lasted for 3 weeks, with a 2-week break without any presbyopia compensation between the two test phases. Examinations were performed at entry (T0) and after each correction modality (Tmono and Tsimult). They included testing for near and distance visual acuity, stereoacuity, binocular contrast sensitivity and electrophysiological recordings (monocular and binocular visual evoked potentials).

Results Follow-up showed no significant differences between the two compensation modalities for either clinical or electrophysiological criteria. However, a significant correlation was found between the difference in TNO score (monovision–simultaneous vision) and the P100 latency evoked by the binocular pattern at T0, suggesting that late P100 latency could be associated with a lesser degree of decrease in stereoacuity with monovision.

Conclusions While our findings do not permit decisions regarding the superiority of one type of compensation over another, these preliminary results support using the P100 latency evoked by binocular patterns as a predictor of postcompensation stereoacuity.

Trial registration number NCT02444130, Pre-results.

  • Electrophysiology
  • Treatment other

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Footnotes

  • Contributors LI, SM, AT, FB-B, P-JP, MB have provided substantial contributions to the conception or design of the work, the acquisition, analysis and interpretation of data for the work. All the authors were involved in drafting the work, revising it critically for important intellectual content. All the authors have given their final approval of the version to be published, and their agreement to be accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved.

  • Competing interests None declared.

  • Ethics approval Ethics Committee of Tours Hospital, France.

  • Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.

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